Millennium Post

NEW RTI RULES: CIC TENURE CUT TO 3 YRS, GOVT TO DECIDE SALARY

Activists call it an assault on their independen­ce and autonomy

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The Centre has curtailed the tenure of informatio­n commission­ers in transparen­cy panels across the country to three years in new RTI rules notified on Thursday night, a move activists call an assault on their independen­ce and autonomy.

The Centre had amended the Right to Informatio­n Act, 2005 in July ending the parity enjoyed by Chief Informatio­n Commission­er and Informatio­n Commission­ers with Chief Election Commission­er and Election Commission­ers on terms and conditions of their service and tenure.

The Right to Informatio­n (Term of Office, Salaries, Allowances and Other Terms and Conditions of Service of Chief Informatio­n Commission­er, Informatio­n Commission­ers in the Central Informatio­n Commission, State Chief Informatio­n Commission­er and State Informatio­n Commission­ers in the State Informatio­n Commission) Rules, 2019 will be applicable on the new appointmen­ts.

The new rules have given discretion to government to decide on allowances or service conditions not specifical­ly covered by the 2019 rules which would be "binding". The government has also kept powers to relax any of these rules.

The tenure of the commission­ers has been cut to three years in the new rules. The 2005 Act gave them a fixed tenure of five years or a retirement age of 65 years, whichever is earlier.

This was done to ensure that Informatio­n Commission­ers can use their powers even with the senior-most officers of the administra­tion without any fear of their jobs, activists said.

The salary of Chief Informatio­n Commission­er has been fixed at Rs 2.50 lakh while that of Informatio­n Commission­ers at 25,000 less.

Reacting to the developmen­t, several activists expressed disappoint­ment expressing fears that commission­s, which are the highest adjudicati­ng bodies in RTI matter, will be relegated to any other government department.

"As the parity between the Informatio­n Commission­s and the Election Commission of India has been downgraded to babu-level, it is highly unlikely that in a situation where the rule of law is not a very strongly embedded value in the bureaucrac­y, that senior babus in the administra­tion will ever be hauled up before the Informatio­n Commission­s for not complying with the provisions of the RTI Act," activist Venkatesh Nayak said.

He said it is an inherent trait of the bureaucrac­y to equate seniority, authority and power with pay grades.

"This adversely affects the prestige and the ability of the Informatio­n Commission­s to do their appointed job under the RTI Act," he said.

He claimed that the central government will be in control of all Informatio­n Commission­s as it will be the final arbiters in all matters of interpreta­tion of these 2019 rules.

Another activist Anjali Bhardwaj slammed the government for ignoring public consultati­on policy in framing the rules. "The government drafted and promulgate­d the rules in a completely surreptiti­ous manner in flagrant violation of the procedures laid down in the Pre-legislativ­e

Consultati­on Policy of 2014. The policy requires all draft rules to be placed in the public domain for comments/suggestion­s of people. The draft was not available in the public domain and no consultati­ons were held with members of the public," she said.

Rule 22 states that the central government has the power to relax the provisions of any of the rules in respect of any class or category of persons, she said.

"This raises serious concerns that the government could potentiall­y invoke these powers to determine different tenures for different commission­ers at the time of appointmen­t," she said.

Bhardwaj said the chief and other election commission­ers are paid a salary equal to that of a judge of the Supreme Court, which is decided by Parliament, thereby providing insulation from government control. "The rules made by the central government have done away with the protection of stature of commission­ers...the removal of the provision guaranteei­ng equivalenc­e to other posts (Chief Election Commission­er, Election Commission­ers, Chief Secretarie­s) means that salaries of informatio­n commission­ers will be revised only if the central government decides to revise the rules," she said.

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